I was contacted recently on behalf of DairyCo who are an organisation working on behalf of British dairy farmers who help to provide independent evidence-based information and resources for dairy farming business. DairyCo wanted to share their rules of the countryside to encourage more people to get out into the countryside, enjoy the fresh air and help support the local farming community.
As a townie-turned-country girl myself - my next door neighbour is a dairy farmer - I thought I'd share these rules with you. Grab your wellies and breathe in that lovely country air!
The ten rules of the countryside
1. Be friendly. The morning commute in
the city can turn the most polite of us into self centred battlers whose
strategy for getting through the day is head down and elbows out. Not so in the countryside, where ignoring a
fellow human is practically unheard of – 99% of people living in the
countryside greet people they meet with at least a ‘hello’ when out and about.
So get practising in the mirror for a facial work out and a genuine spirited
grin rather than a ‘Blue Steel’ grimace.
2. Become a foodie. From Cheddar to Caerphilly, the countryside is the place
to enjoy classic British produce. Favoured by a quarter of respondents, the
traditional Ploughman’s lunch with a good chunk of local cheese was the food
people most like to eat when in the countryside. There is something special
about flavour, freshness and the sense of ‘good stuff’ on your plate.
3. Visit a farm.
Yes you can... and it doesn’t cost a week’s salary for a family of four as some
days out can. We don’t need to look too far back in time to realise that
farming used to play a bigger part in our collective consciousness, so it’s
unsurprising that older generations are more likely to be aware that a trip to
the country can be combined with a visit to a working farm. Nearly eight out of
10 of over 65s know that it’s possible to pay a visit to a farm, compared with
less than half of 18-24 year olds.
4. Lose the preconceptions. Close your eyes and picture a British farmer. Who do
you see? More than half of respondents conjured up a flat cap, tweed clothes,
walking stick and a sheep dog, with less than one in 10 associating farming
with names like Glastonbury founder Michael Eavis or former Blur
guitarist-turned-cheesemaker Alex James - despite both being well known farming
profiles. And while they may not be quite typical, the face of farming is
changing: figures from one agricultural
college shows the number of female students have nearly doubled in five years.
So don’t be surprised if there isn’t a flat cap to be seen on your next trip to
the country. It’s a real place, not an artist’s impression.
5. Go local. Around half of people surveyed agree that the most enjoyable aspect
about a visit to the countryside is finding a good local pub for the evening,
with a real log fire, real ales and local grub, so don’t look for the nearest restaurant chain
to spend the evening in – you could do that anywhere. Find a local gem and get
cosy with all the good senses of sight, smell, taste and sound at play.
6. Switch off the TV. A busy lifestyle means our standards may be slipping with
regard to what constitutes ‘quality time’ with a partner. Three in four people
agree that watching television is entertaining, but only one in three think it
makes their relationships stronger. Yet watching TV is by far the most popular
‘communications activity’ in the UK according to Ofcom, the telecoms regulator.
With the majority of respondents – including 70% of countryside residents -
agreeing that a walk in the countryside makes their relationships stronger,
what are you waiting for? Switch off Dancing
on Ice and don your walking boots.
7. Go cow spotting. There are more dairy cows in Britain than there are people
in Birmingham, Liverpool and Manchester put together, yet one in 10 people have
never seen one up close, and nearly six in ten would ignore this good-natured
goddess if they came across one whilst out exploring. But this black and white
beauty is fascinating to watch and remarkably human in nature – a recent study suggests cows are good ‘social networkers’ that form important group structures
within their herd.
8. Chill out. Ease yourself into the lack of human traffic and open your
ears to the sounds of nature. Respondents voted birdsong and farmyard noises as
the most relaxing sounds to listen to, with just 4% agreeing that general ‘people
noise’ in a city helped them chill out. Me time needs a good backdrop that
isn’t all about the bustle and the drama.
9. Go au naturel. Nearly half of city dwellers wear just as much slap in the
city as they do in the countryside, but more than a third of countryside residents
don’t wear any at all. So when in Rome, do as the locals (or in this case the
‘rurals’) do, strip off that facial
camouflage, and adopt a look more Catherine Zeta Jones in The Darling Buds of May –
rosy cheeks and tousled tresses – than the power jungle uniform. Everything
needs a breather from time to time, including our faces!
10. Swap the shop. When you’re staying in a nice self catered cottage, do you really want
to stock the shelves with the same things you could get at home? We think not! Nearly
half of people say that a visit to a farm shop would improve their stay in the
countryside, so find one as soon as you arrive and stock the fridge with some
homemade delights. Any leftovers can go back to the city as a souvenir! Nothing
beats hand-cured cheese or a dollop of ice cream made on the farm, and served
to you with the smile you can expect from rule one.
Some really great points there I think you'll agree? However I have to say I can't agree with No9 - I may be a country girl these days but I absolutely never leave the house without make up!
If you want to find out more about dairy farming or get some more inspiration about how you could make best use of the countryside why not visit http://www.thisisdairyfarming.com/ and if you've got any of your own useful countryside tips, leave a comment below!



I grew up in the countryside and thought it was normal to buy your eggs from a farmer bringing your egg box with you to pick it up. Farming is where the food industry starts. People somehow forget that! Also on politeness, that follows (a lot of the time) with driving too. People let you out in the countryside, at least 50% of the time.
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